Saving money, losing sight.

RNIB campaign report

November 2013


Contents

Foreword 3

Acknowledgements 4

About RNIB 4

1. Executive summary 5

2. About sight loss 15

3. Background and policy context 17

4. Capacity in ophthalmology clinics 20

5. Assessing need and commissioning eye care services 34

References 38

Appendices 39


Foreword

Sight is precious. Sight is the sense we most fear losing. However, today, patients are going blind unnecessarily because of capacity problems in eye clinics across England. This is the shocking reality as eye clinics are simply too busy to keep up with demand.

Patients are of course incredibly grateful to ophthalmology staff who work long hours, under intense pressure, even putting free time to one side in order to run extra clinics. Many patients describe the service they receive as ‘marvellous’ and ‘ first class’. However, they also express concerns about aspects of their care including cancelled and delayed appointments, over-subscribed clinics, long waits to see a professional at each appointment and rushed consultations.

These problems are frequently caused by lack of capacity in eye clinics - where staff are being asked to do ever more with the same resources. Staff describe their working conditions as “chaotic” and “running from one crisis to another.” Despite raising alarm bells and asking for additional support, their requests are not being heard. Hospital managers are all too often ignoring the capacity crisis, putting patients’ sight at risk and their staff on course for burnout.

This situation is made worse by the fact that commissioners, who plan and fund healthcare services locally, are not always working with accurate information on the eye care needs of their local populations. Department of Health guidance states that commissioners should refer to local authority Joint Strategic Needs Assessments (which analyse the health and wellbeing needs of the local community) when making decisions. However, less than half of these assessments contain information on eye health. This inevitably means eye care service planning is a hit or miss affair. Whether you lose or keep your sight depends simply upon where you live - a terrible “postcode lottery.”

This situation cannot continue - urgent action is needed to stop people losing their sight unnecessarily.

Lesley-Anne Alexander CBE

RNIB Chief Executive


Acknowledgements

We would like to express our gratitude to the commissioners, staff from across the NHS and patients who gave their time to share their personal experiences and insights. My thanks also go to Fazilet Hadi, Steve Winyard, Tara Melton, Victoria Armitage and Rachel Harby at RNIB for their input.

Clara Eaglen, Policy and Campaigns Manager, RNIB

About RNIB

Royal National Institute of Blind People (RNIB) is the leading charity in the UK offering information, support and advice to almost two million people with sight loss.

We are a membership organisation with over 10,000 members who are blind, partially sighted or the friends and family of people with sight loss.

Our three main priorities are set out by our five year strategy (2009-2014):

·  stopping people losing their sight unnecessarily

·  supporting independent living

·  creating an inclusive society.

As a campaigning organisation, we fight for the rights of blind and partially sighted people across the UK and push for better access to diagnosis and treatment to prevent avoidable sight loss.


1. Executive summary

Introduction

Losing sight can have an enormous emotional and financial toll. Some patients report feeling depressed, anxious and emotionally distraught.

Without sight, people are at risk of losing their employment and their ability to travel independently as well as having to rely on carers to undertake day to day tasks. They are also at higher risk of experiencing falls and accidents which require further NHS health and social care services.

Over the last decade, many new treatments have been developed, saving the sight of thousands of people who would previously have gone blind. This is an enormous and welcome step forward. However, despite these advances, a worrying development is now placing patients’ sight at risk - a looming capacity crisis in ophthalmology.

Patients are incredibly grateful to the hard working staff in eye clinics but do have significant concerns about aspects of their care such cancelled and delayed appointments, long waits to see a professional at each appointment and rushed consultations. Patients we have spoken to realise that staff are doing everything they can to save their sight but are under considerable pressure. For example, we hear that:

“The eye hospital clinics are total chaos! The appointment time bears no relationship to when you will be seen. I find it so hard to sit for hours not knowing what is happening. The staff are nice but totally overrun.”

“I knew delays would lead to permanent damage that could never be reversed - I started to think I would never gain access to what I needed to save my sight before I lost it forever.”

“When the specialist says he wants to see you in three months, you should see him in that timeframe, instead of having to wait for seven months during which time your condition has worsened.”

"I attend the eye clinic every three months. I have laser, it’s like a cattle market and I feel I am just another number."

Anecdotal evidence suggests that lack of capacity in eye clinics is to blame for the delays to diagnosis and treatment, and that this could be putting the sight of tens of thousands of people at risk. To investigate, we undertook research to examine ophthalmology staff views on capacity. Additional research was conducted to gather intelligence on the mechanisms used by local authorities and commissioners to assess, plan and deliver eye care services for local populations.

Methodology

In summer 2013, RNIB carried out a survey of staff in eye clinics across England. We asked about current and future capacity, the impact of insufficient capacity on patient care and possible solutions. By September 2013, 172 responses were received from a range of eye health professionals including 91 ophthalmologists and 59 ophthalmic nurses.

As local authorities and clinical commissioning groups (CCGs) work together to assess the health needs of their local populations; RNIB decided to undertake additional research to supplement the findings of the staff survey and examine the commissioning process as a whole. To do this, online research was conducted to assess which local authority Joint Strategic Needs Assessments (JSNAs) include information and data on eye care and sight loss. JSNAs are important as CCGs must refer to them when making commissioning decisions.

Finally, a Freedom of Information request was sent to all CCGs across England seeking information on the evidence they use to commission eye care services.

Our findings show that:

So what did our research reveal? Is capacity a major problem in ophthalmology and is it having a detrimental impact on patient care? The simple and unfortunate answer is yes. Our findings show that:

·  Patients are going blind due to sizeable capacity problems in ophthalmology clinics across England:

37 per cent of respondents said that patients are "sometimes" losing their sight unnecessarily due to delayed treatment and monitoring caused by capacity problems. A further four per cent of respondents said this is happening "often". These statistics are shameful as nobody should lose sight from a treatable condition simply because their eye clinic is too busy to treat them in a clinically appropriate timescale.

In relation to these findings, Nicola Wainwright, a partner at leading clinical negligence law firm Leigh Day, told us: "As clinical negligence specialists, we have acted for clients whose long term vision has been permanently affected when, for example, their diagnosis, treatment or follow-up has been delayed. In such cases, lack of capacity in the eye clinic seems to have contributed to fundamental breaches of care, giving rise to claims in clinical negligence."

In addition to sight loss, lack of capacity gives rise to other negative implications for patient care and by far the biggest problem (according to 82 per cent of respondents) is rescheduled and cancelled appointments. Other issues include long waits to see a professional at each appointment, which can be two to three hours, and rushed appointments, leaving little time for the patient to discuss their eye condition and its treatment with their professional. This leads to misunderstandings and considerable amounts of stress for both the patient and professional. It also hampers the patient's ability to make an informed choice about their care.

·  The capacity crisis in ophthalmology is countrywide with clinics under extreme pressure to meet demand:

Staff in all regions of England responded to the survey and over 80 per cent of respondents said their eye department has insufficient capacity to meet current demand. Over half said the problems are so significant that they have to undertake extra clinics in the evenings and at weekends to keep up with demand. Many departments report a huge backlog of patients and chronic understaffing. It is clear that eye clinics are in fire fighting mode and that the relentless schedule, resulting in long working hours, is putting staff at serious risk of burnout.

The situation gets worse when respondents were asked about capacity in the longer term, with 94 per cent reporting that future capacity will not meet rising demand.

Lack of capacity is of course a complex issue and many factors contribute to the problem. However, our research has uncovered four reasons which seem to be the main drivers:

1.  A significant increase in demand for services across a broader range of conditions:

The majority of survey respondents agreed that the ageing population (87 per cent) and availability of new treatments (88 per cent) have led to a rapid increase in demand for services.

A new type of treatment, known as anti-vascular endothelial growth factor (anti-VEGF), has resulted in greater numbers of patients needing regular monitoring and treatment. This development is a warmly welcomed and has saved the sight of many patients who would otherwise have gone blind. It has also placed sizable strain on eye departments. Staff report being “overwhelmed” by anti-VEGF clinic appointments and many (70 per cent of respondents) say this has impacted upon other eye care services, as managers re-direct funding and staff resources into these clinics. Some respondents warn that the focus on conditions that can be treated with anti-VEGFs mean that people with other chronic eye conditions are going blind while they wait for an appointment. This is despite the fact that potential numbers of patients were predicted well in advance.

Potential treatments for dry AMD – currently an untreatable disease – are also likely to be available within the next five to ten years. This will be a significant and hugely welcomed development but will place additional strain on eye clinics, with even greater numbers of patients needing regular monitoring and treatment. This is why it is so important to manage capacity sooner rather than waiting for the crisis to get worse.

2.  No clear strategy for coping with current and future demand:

Just over half (52 per cent) of survey respondents said their department reviews current need to ensure service provision meets demand. This number drops to 44 per cent when asked if they also consider future need. In the case of departments that do not plan, respondents suggest that heavy workload prevents them having time to review resourcing needs.

When eye clinics do review demand and produce business cases seeking extra resources, their requests are often dismissed by hospital trust management, usually due to financial constraints. Survey respondents report that ophthalmology is only seen as a minor issue by Hospital Trust Boards and is rarely given the priority it deserves. Many respondents state that management only address problems when departments are at breaking point and that this often involves short term solutions such as recruiting expensive locums to alleviate immediate staff shortages.

3.  A lack of local planning of eye health and sight loss services:

Although preventing unnecessary sight loss has been prioritised in the Government's Public Health Outcomes Framework, our research reveals a lack of eye health population planning in many areas of the country. Only 40 per cent of all Joint Strategic Needs Assessments (JSNAs) in England contain information on sight loss and eye health. Some regions are worse than others, for example, 93 per cent of JSNAs in the West Midlands and 82 per cent in the North West have little or no information on sight loss. This is problematic as local authorities have been asked to demonstrate improvements in public health outcomes against the issues listed within their JSNA.

4.  An inconsistent approach to commissioning eye care services:

There is no consistent approach to commissioning eye care services across England. Department of Health guidance states that CCGs must refer to their local JSNAs and local authority public health advice when making decisions about commissioning services. However, our Freedom of Information (FOI) survey reveals that only 64 per cent actually do. In some cases, CCGs are using JSNAs that do not contain information on eye health and sight loss, which is the case with NHS Birmingham South and Central CCG and NHS Knowsley CCG.

Findings also show that CCGs are making commissioning decisions based on very different levels of evidence. Some, such as NHS South Devon and Torbay CCG, are to be applauded for undertaking in-depth, independent evaluations of the eye health needs of their local populations, while others rely solely on JSNAs and public health advice from their local authorities. Between these two extremes, CCGs are referring to an array of sources to facilitate their commissioning decisions and these differ both in quality and quantity. Such inconsistent use of evidence can only lead to a decision making postcode lottery and be detrimental to patient care.

Our findings also reveal that a quarter of commissioning groups have no lead for eye care. Poor dialogue between CCGs and ophthalmology specialists is reported to be hampering commissioners' ability to plan and deliver high quality eye care.

Recommendations

These shocking results should act as a wake-up call to the Government, NHS England, commissioners and hospital trusts alike. Urgent action is clearly needed to prevent people losing their sight needlessly and ensure effective and efficient eye care services are in place to meet rising demand. To do this, RNIB calls for action against the following six recommendations: